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Aug 20, 2012
08/12
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low-up to his book "how capitalism will save us." this is half an hour. >> joining us on booktv is a magazine publisher, politician, and frequent author, steve out who newess >> host: we have magazine ar publisher, politician and frequent author steve forbes whose newest book is called freedom manifesto why free-market our moral and big government is sent to. we are at freedomfest where mr. forbes is speaking.stat what it is an example? >> we make the emphasis is big government as defined by james madison but does the b opposite of what it purportse to do we have possibility tondsc get ahead and crony capitalism herds entreprenuership of theale thin things the government says it does to take the rough edges to major they go on the right direction does the opposite their short-term oriented. they have their own agenda with special interest groups. the bigger they get them more harm say do and the less chance toh prove youre youe lot in life. >> host: morality is a part of capitalism? >> hold basis of capitalism based on values and nee
low-up to his book "how capitalism will save us." this is half an hour. >> joining us on booktv is a magazine publisher, politician, and frequent author, steve out who newess >> host: we have magazine ar publisher, politician and frequent author steve forbes whose newest book is called freedom manifesto why free-market our moral and big government is sent to. we are at freedomfest where mr. forbes is speaking.stat what it is an example? >> we make the emphasis is big...
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Jul 30, 2012
07/12
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. >> host: rod beckstrom joins us from las vegas. mr. beckstrom, thank you for being on "the communicators." also joining us here in our washington studio is gautham nagesh, editor of the technology executive briefing for cq. mr. nagesh, if you would start the questioning. >> host: absolutely. hello, rod. our first question today is who owns the internet right now? or the physical star of the inter-- star of the internet? >> guest: governments own a very small amount, but we estimate over 85% is actually owned by private individuals and firms. >> host: and a look at the federal infrastructure involved. >> host: and are they concentrated in any particular country, or is it fairly spread apart? >> guest: you know, we estimate there's approximately 2.2 billion users on the internet today. about half of that investment overall is in asia, and half is spread around the world. the united states has got a pretty good portion, europe, but you've also got good penetration growing in latin america and africa. >> host: so, rod beckstrom, who manage
. >> host: rod beckstrom joins us from las vegas. mr. beckstrom, thank you for being on "the communicators." also joining us here in our washington studio is gautham nagesh, editor of the technology executive briefing for cq. mr. nagesh, if you would start the questioning. >> host: absolutely. hello, rod. our first question today is who owns the internet right now? or the physical star of the inter-- star of the internet? >> guest: governments own a very small...
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Jul 29, 2012
07/12
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i think a lot of parents -- and using this and we've got issues. it's not something that the jump to readily like they are excited to put their kids on medication. they have concerns about. the problem is i think especially for teenagers and even children who are not very good at articulating their feelings it takes quite a skilled therapist to pull out those feelings and to really make progress with the child. and so, i think that medication can be in a way really anonymous and a great way. it can be a way of sort of keeping your private problems private if you want to but also feel like you're making progress. >> it's interesting because you describe your feeling when you began medication that it was liberating. there was freed and allowed you to be the person you knew you were. this runs counter to the few people have of medication especially kids were teenagers as often used in chemical straitjacket, something that turns kids into zombies and makes them comply and let's say with society's demands of the opposite if anything that is liberating.
i think a lot of parents -- and using this and we've got issues. it's not something that the jump to readily like they are excited to put their kids on medication. they have concerns about. the problem is i think especially for teenagers and even children who are not very good at articulating their feelings it takes quite a skilled therapist to pull out those feelings and to really make progress with the child. and so, i think that medication can be in a way really anonymous and a great way. it...
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Sep 25, 2012
09/12
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there are many consumers who are using applications on their smartphone, and in particular kids and teens are taking up speed. they have a unique ability for very detailed information about consumers on the jeal location. they can access content from defense such as contact lists, userid, all sorts of information there require careful thinking by act developers. so as this economy is booming, i think a tremendous innovation and the space to ensure the players understand the protection law applies to them. >> now these are guidelines, or do they have the effect of all? >> these are guidelines designed to inform the community. developers, a third-party service providers, third-party players, everyone in this case about the types of things they should be thinking about to ensure that they are in compliance in the mall and frankly we think that many of the aspects of the guideline would help them produce better products and engender the consumer trust. >> if an app maker is asking for a contact list of saying we have to have by downloading the sat you have to give us your contact list, who yo
there are many consumers who are using applications on their smartphone, and in particular kids and teens are taking up speed. they have a unique ability for very detailed information about consumers on the jeal location. they can access content from defense such as contact lists, userid, all sorts of information there require careful thinking by act developers. so as this economy is booming, i think a tremendous innovation and the space to ensure the players understand the protection law...
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Apr 6, 2012
04/12
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they let us down that path. as only afghans can do inside of their country or significant improvement in terms of intelligence capacity on a human side with the police and nds. the thing that is bringing us all together, is unlike 2006 and 2007, the army hated the police. the police hated the army. nobody trusted nds. will be at if you are in afghan border policeman. you had that kind of environment. in the environment that i came into in 2011, our provincial coordination centers had matured. we started that back in 2007. now you have the senior representation from the afghan forces to include in the nds. and the governor's officers in a single coordination center. the best description of it is one of our task operation centers. they have all the communication, technology in their and they are sharing and coordinating intelligence information. when the nds guy comes in, and says one of our informants just told us that there is a vehicular explosive device that is moving from [inaudible]. it looks like they're go
they let us down that path. as only afghans can do inside of their country or significant improvement in terms of intelligence capacity on a human side with the police and nds. the thing that is bringing us all together, is unlike 2006 and 2007, the army hated the police. the police hated the army. nobody trusted nds. will be at if you are in afghan border policeman. you had that kind of environment. in the environment that i came into in 2011, our provincial coordination centers had matured....
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Jan 29, 2012
01/12
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either you're with us or against us. so he live inside a very different world where he said i don't do nuance, and obama almost only does nuance. so we have the opposite of the two presidents back to back. >> when you write these books, do you hear from people in the white house? >> well, this time i did. the first interview i gave which was with huffington post, that day the director of communications for the white house called up the interviewer and asked them about it. so i didn't hear directly, but they did, and i ended up getting them a book because they wanted to see it. with the bush people, i did not hear directly, except i met a few people who knew him, met karl rove and some different people, they weren't too excited about the book. >> that was a few minutes with dr. justin frank, "obama on the couch" is the book. we covered dr. frank at politics & prose, you can watch that at booktv dork. booktv.org. >> c-span's road to the white house coverage takes you live to the candidate events in florida through the week
either you're with us or against us. so he live inside a very different world where he said i don't do nuance, and obama almost only does nuance. so we have the opposite of the two presidents back to back. >> when you write these books, do you hear from people in the white house? >> well, this time i did. the first interview i gave which was with huffington post, that day the director of communications for the white house called up the interviewer and asked them about it. so i...
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May 7, 2012
05/12
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it used to be a discussion i would have with some of my colleagues i used to work with all the time that would say, yeah, i thought about going to dhs, but i'm not quite sure they're ready for somebody at my level. my response is if you going there would help prepare them better, i think that's what we've seen. the talent that came over that really implemented, we brought someone who was with the energy secretary, ran the cybersecurity for a couple states. we have the talent there. and, granted, it's very competitive which is part of why legislation is looking to give dhs the ability to become more competitive pay wise with not only private sector, but other goth agencies -- government agencies. >> host: what do you think of john mccain's approach? no mandates, but protecting infrastructure, according to him. >> guest: yeah, and that's the challenge we have. the idea of somebody saying, well, i'll do something i'm supposed to do, but don't ask me to prove it, that's a challenge. and is coming from a private sector background and a background with venture capitalists and folks that work i
it used to be a discussion i would have with some of my colleagues i used to work with all the time that would say, yeah, i thought about going to dhs, but i'm not quite sure they're ready for somebody at my level. my response is if you going there would help prepare them better, i think that's what we've seen. the talent that came over that really implemented, we brought someone who was with the energy secretary, ran the cybersecurity for a couple states. we have the talent there. and,...
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May 28, 2012
05/12
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thanks for being with us. you can watch any of the previous "communicators" at c-span.org. >> join us this saturday for more from the ncta convention. we'll bring you discussions on the future of film and music distribution with the ceos of comcast and verizon wireless, a look at cable news and a panel on the 2012 presidential campaign with msnbc host chris matthews, cnn anchor john king and univision's maria elena salinas. that's saturday starting at 10 a.m. eastern on c-span. >>> up next, author and syndicated columnist mark steyn. the theater critic turned political commentator discusses free speech, america's debt and the growth of muslim populations in the west. mr. steyn's best-selling works include his 2011 release, "after america." >> host: and, mark steyn, in your 2006 book, "america alone," where did that title come from? >> guest: i ought to confess that title came from the publisher, from my editor at regnery, a gentleman called harry crocker. i had a far more artful and elusive title that he thoug
thanks for being with us. you can watch any of the previous "communicators" at c-span.org. >> join us this saturday for more from the ncta convention. we'll bring you discussions on the future of film and music distribution with the ceos of comcast and verizon wireless, a look at cable news and a panel on the 2012 presidential campaign with msnbc host chris matthews, cnn anchor john king and univision's maria elena salinas. that's saturday starting at 10 a.m. eastern on c-span....
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Sep 24, 2012
09/12
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>> guest: um, we do what congress tells us to do. congress has given us a very expansive law dealing with privacy. it's, um, an unfair and deceptive acts and practices law is the general, um, law that we enforce. we also have laws in particular areas that we enforce involving children's privacy, financial privacy, some medical information, and when i said financial, it's in some context. some medical information in some context. so, um, we are very much in privacy and in many ways we at the federal trade commission are the nation's leading privacy law enforcement entity. the fcc has a very important role when it comes to the carriers. and when it comes to other entities in the mobile space. so we work with our sister agency on these issues. >> host: and would it be possible to have a dual system where, okay, if you want this app, you can pay a buck a month for it, and we won't track you, or you can get it for free, and we get your information? is that in our current world? >> guest: i think it exists in our current world. i mean, i,
>> guest: um, we do what congress tells us to do. congress has given us a very expansive law dealing with privacy. it's, um, an unfair and deceptive acts and practices law is the general, um, law that we enforce. we also have laws in particular areas that we enforce involving children's privacy, financial privacy, some medical information, and when i said financial, it's in some context. some medical information in some context. so, um, we are very much in privacy and in many ways we at...
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Jun 25, 2012
06/12
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and the innovations that we've developed are being used in a way that will allow us to continue to innovate and make products going forward. and so i think the role of the private -- this is a case where and putting things on blacklists, etc., is never going to be the whole solution. you actually need an engaged community that is focused on trying to maximize the good and minimize the bad on an ongoing basis and responding to the challenges as they evolve. >> host: um, you had mentioned earlier even in the u.s. you had law enforcement uses that are legitimate for filtering and monitoring. how much pushback do you get as you go out and talk to your counterparts in other countries about the way they look at the internet and saying, well, you know, you do this, the u.s. does this? i've heard criticisms in the debates over net neutrality and also the debate over the online piracy bills that were in congress earlier this year, um that these kinds of approaches set bad examples, um, that if, you know, we mess with the dnf look-up through the piracy stuff, that sets a bad example, and people will
and the innovations that we've developed are being used in a way that will allow us to continue to innovate and make products going forward. and so i think the role of the private -- this is a case where and putting things on blacklists, etc., is never going to be the whole solution. you actually need an engaged community that is focused on trying to maximize the good and minimize the bad on an ongoing basis and responding to the challenges as they evolve. >> host: um, you had mentioned...
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Jul 22, 2012
07/12
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be a liberating factor in the lives of ordinary people, farmers and trades scommen mechanics who can use the automobile to experience things in life that people on the farm that he had grown up in, had never experienced before. so for him, the automobile was the cutting edge of modern transportation and i don't recall one single thing actually with ford ever even addressing mass transit as the kind of, as a kind of issue. he probably should have. i have been in los angeles a lot recently, and i can tell you, he should have. >> did he do anything to promote road building? there wasn't much in the way of roads then. guest: he contributed some to -- what do they call that? the better road's move crusade which was in the midwest in that period when the automobile was taking the country by storm. and i know that he contributed to sort of surveying and doing the kind of prepare work for the highway system in michigan. i'm not sure if he did in other parts of the country. but the automobile, i think, certainly by the 1920's, had fostered the enormous explosion of road building around the countr
be a liberating factor in the lives of ordinary people, farmers and trades scommen mechanics who can use the automobile to experience things in life that people on the farm that he had grown up in, had never experienced before. so for him, the automobile was the cutting edge of modern transportation and i don't recall one single thing actually with ford ever even addressing mass transit as the kind of, as a kind of issue. he probably should have. i have been in los angeles a lot recently, and i...
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Jun 24, 2012
06/12
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pakistan has brought us here together. "pakistan on the brink" is your book that brought us together. thank you to all of you for participating. ahmed, it is always an inspiration to us and you and a privilege. i think those of us who know you, and perhaps take for granted and should understand, is that your work is not only brilliant and
pakistan has brought us here together. "pakistan on the brink" is your book that brought us together. thank you to all of you for participating. ahmed, it is always an inspiration to us and you and a privilege. i think those of us who know you, and perhaps take for granted and should understand, is that your work is not only brilliant and
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Nov 26, 2012
11/12
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it hit us right, right in the middle of our operating area in new jersey and calm at us -- came at us with a path that was a thousand miles wide. so it impacted us both in our physical distribution plant, our poles and our cables as you might expect both from the wind and from the storm surge and in our central office facilities where we lost power, and our back-up power process really had to kick in and carry over 300 central offices that were impacted at the peak of the storm. >> host: so how many, how many folks lost power, has everybody gotten it back on? if you could speak to that. >> guest: sure. so, you know, we had based on, again, the width of the footprint, we had, we had upwards to five and a half, six million of our customers who had lost power. so folks really felt the impact and, again, we felt that on the central office side also. at the peak of the storm, we had over a million customers or out of service. all of the fios customers as soon as power came back, most of their service was restored. and now a couple weeks later we're doing the final touches on the physical r
it hit us right, right in the middle of our operating area in new jersey and calm at us -- came at us with a path that was a thousand miles wide. so it impacted us both in our physical distribution plant, our poles and our cables as you might expect both from the wind and from the storm surge and in our central office facilities where we lost power, and our back-up power process really had to kick in and carry over 300 central offices that were impacted at the peak of the storm. >> host:...
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Jul 21, 2012
07/12
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i appreciate your chance to visit with us. i do appreciate all the testimony that was given here today. thank you very much. and this committee will stand adjourned. [inaudible conversations] >> this weekend on booktv from new york city the harlem book fair. live coverage starts today at 12:30 eastern with a panel discussion on the future of african-american publishing. that's followed at 2 with a look at public education. at 3:30, cornel west sits in on a panel examining the next election. and sunday at 2 p.m. eastern the eagle forum collegiate leadership summit with authors. the harlem book fair and the eagle forum collegians leadership summit this weekend on c-span2. >> cleveland clinic's president and ceo discussed upcoming changes in health care policy at the national press club. he said the health care law makes great strides in providing access but does not do enough to control costs. he also noted that the law does not have enough incentives to encourage people to take care of themselves. from washington, d.c., this is
i appreciate your chance to visit with us. i do appreciate all the testimony that was given here today. thank you very much. and this committee will stand adjourned. [inaudible conversations] >> this weekend on booktv from new york city the harlem book fair. live coverage starts today at 12:30 eastern with a panel discussion on the future of african-american publishing. that's followed at 2 with a look at public education. at 3:30, cornel west sits in on a panel examining the next...
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Sep 4, 2012
09/12
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which we have been using until now. so what we are trying to push is having burden sharing, bringing different players. we have been able to work with the chinese, and the chinese now are paying for their own aids response which is very important, less billion dollars which global fund pay. we have been working with india, india decided to pay for all their response from this year, so we are seeing south africa increasing to $1.5 billion. so we are seeing the world come in with response in different way. and we need to make sure that of course it will base on social justice, better redistribution of opportunities. that is critical because if not, we'll not be able to make it. i was in san francisco, i met someone there who i said to peter, it told me that is treatment cost is $72,000 per year per person. how that can happen in malley or -- [inaudible] -- mali or. [inaudible] if we know we have nine million people waiting for treatment in africa, we need innovation. we need to develop change. so i think like a new moveme
which we have been using until now. so what we are trying to push is having burden sharing, bringing different players. we have been able to work with the chinese, and the chinese now are paying for their own aids response which is very important, less billion dollars which global fund pay. we have been working with india, india decided to pay for all their response from this year, so we are seeing south africa increasing to $1.5 billion. so we are seeing the world come in with response in...
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Dec 8, 2012
12/12
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how can history help us understand it? in classical economics, rationing simply means goods and services are distributed by price. in other words not everybody can afford everything they possibly want or need. so supply and demand are controlled by people's ability to pay. rationing by price or by the market goes a long way to describe the u.s. health care delivery system. the government may not officially deny you health-care but many americans cannot get the care their need because they can't afford it. in the u.s. health system until 1986 it was legal for hospitals to turn away patients because they could not pay. that is still true in the case of non emergency conditions. we have a huge number of studies showing economic barriers lead to people not being able to obtain primary and preventive care and even lead to reduced life expectancy. so the u.s. rations health care based on the ability to pay. people without health insurance have trouble getting care or don't get it at all with severe consequences to their health b
how can history help us understand it? in classical economics, rationing simply means goods and services are distributed by price. in other words not everybody can afford everything they possibly want or need. so supply and demand are controlled by people's ability to pay. rationing by price or by the market goes a long way to describe the u.s. health care delivery system. the government may not officially deny you health-care but many americans cannot get the care their need because they can't...
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Oct 30, 2012
10/12
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but right now a lot of us use gmail, and all of our mail is stored on a server at google. so it's just interesting that we as a society have given our information out. whether we want it to be for everyone or just for a few people, it's out there, you know, on someone's server, and so people can get to it. and that's sort of changed the well -- whole way of privacy in this age. >> host: so are you finding as a security consultant that the social medias of the world, the facebooks, the twitters, etc., that they are leading in security precautions or not? >> guest: well, some of them certainly are. google makes a show, for sure, for having a pretty secure web browser in chrome, but right now, not too long ago they were attacked by they think the chinese, and they were able to get in their networks and steal a lot of data. and so even the best get hit. another example is microsoft. about ten years ago, they started a program to try to produce secure software. so back when windows 98 was out, it was really awful. but now the newest version of windows is quite good. so they've
but right now a lot of us use gmail, and all of our mail is stored on a server at google. so it's just interesting that we as a society have given our information out. whether we want it to be for everyone or just for a few people, it's out there, you know, on someone's server, and so people can get to it. and that's sort of changed the well -- whole way of privacy in this age. >> host: so are you finding as a security consultant that the social medias of the world, the facebooks, the...
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Feb 6, 2012
02/12
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conference, very few people were able to use their cell phones. while that's, obviously, an issue of the crowds here in vegas, it's also an indication of the state of our wireless networks in our country. so the spectrum crunch appears to be very real, and people want something done about it. >> host: okay. one more piece of technology that you're looking forward to seeing here at the consumer electronics show. >> guest: well, i've heard a lot of things about some of these new game consoles. play playstation's showing a handheld device. a friend of mine got a preview, that's supposed to be amazing. so there's a lot of gaming breakthroughs that are really interesting. >> host: i've noticed that google and facebook are not represented here, nor is apple. >> guest: apple traditionally doesn't come here. you do see some of the larger technology giants, they don't come here. a lot of vendors here are part of that facebook/google ecosystem where the producing products built on those platforms, but those companies have enough clout that they like to do p
conference, very few people were able to use their cell phones. while that's, obviously, an issue of the crowds here in vegas, it's also an indication of the state of our wireless networks in our country. so the spectrum crunch appears to be very real, and people want something done about it. >> host: okay. one more piece of technology that you're looking forward to seeing here at the consumer electronics show. >> guest: well, i've heard a lot of things about some of these new game...
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Jul 16, 2012
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we're not asking for anything, we just want to let us innovate, let us do our thing. those areas of technology where entrepreneurs are allow today go forward are ones which would work great in countries around the world. that's all the opportunity you want. let innovation flourish. and to policymakers or lawmakers come down to this? do they enjoy seeing this? >> guest: they're very busy, and they do like coming down. it's tough getting them to las vegas. we think it's very important that policymakers see what the real world is like so they can make informed decisions when they're actually making votes and doing other things that are affecting, basically, how you can build products, what you can do, who you trade with, things like that. great american companies like apple and google and others are -- we have them here in the united states, and we have great international companies here. but it's working. the u.s. is the world leader. we want to keep it that way. but it's important we have the right policies. >> host: when we walked into the displays here, we saw your t
we're not asking for anything, we just want to let us innovate, let us do our thing. those areas of technology where entrepreneurs are allow today go forward are ones which would work great in countries around the world. that's all the opportunity you want. let innovation flourish. and to policymakers or lawmakers come down to this? do they enjoy seeing this? >> guest: they're very busy, and they do like coming down. it's tough getting them to las vegas. we think it's very important that...
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Aug 27, 2012
08/12
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niche's going to be able to use it -- anyone's going to be able to use it. we built it in partnership with cnn and tenth wave, and people are going to be able to declare their intention they're going to vote, share that with friends and see their friends who are also going to vote as well because we really see the power of friends. we find that facebook users are 57% more likely to persuade a friend or coworker to vote. so in the an election where it can just come down to a few hundred votes, that can become very powerful. but in using the app, people will be able to not only say they're voting, but share what issues matter to them and where they land on those issues and how that compares not only to their friends, but other people in their state or other people here in the united states. >> host: do you see a time ever when there's just going to be virtual campaigning? you were talking about the social victory center where people in new york can encourage nevadans to vote, etc. >> guest: i would say what i love about american democracy is it is fundamentall
niche's going to be able to use it -- anyone's going to be able to use it. we built it in partnership with cnn and tenth wave, and people are going to be able to declare their intention they're going to vote, share that with friends and see their friends who are also going to vote as well because we really see the power of friends. we find that facebook users are 57% more likely to persuade a friend or coworker to vote. so in the an election where it can just come down to a few hundred votes,...
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May 21, 2012
05/12
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send us an e-mail at booktv@cspan.org, or tweet us at twitter.com/booktv. >> from 1971 to 1973, president richard nixon secretly recorded his phone conversations and meetings. this weekend on c-span radio hear more of the nixon tapes. saturday at 6 p.m. eastern with conversations between the president and cia director richard helms and also fbi director j. edgar hoover. >> some people think that now that this quarter's active, i've got to make a statement about the freedom of the press and that we aren't trying to censor them and so forth. my inclination is not to say so -- >> i think you're right. >> i kind of think i should stay out. but what's your public relations view on it, edgar? i'd just like to know. >> you should remain absolutely silent about it. >> you would, huh? >> i would. >> in washington, d.c. listen at 90.1 fm. nationwide we're on xm channel 119 and streaming at c-span radio.org. >> here are the best selling nonfiction books according to "the new york times." this list reflect sales as of may 17th. topping the list is robert caro's "passage of power," the fourth volume o
send us an e-mail at booktv@cspan.org, or tweet us at twitter.com/booktv. >> from 1971 to 1973, president richard nixon secretly recorded his phone conversations and meetings. this weekend on c-span radio hear more of the nixon tapes. saturday at 6 p.m. eastern with conversations between the president and cia director richard helms and also fbi director j. edgar hoover. >> some people think that now that this quarter's active, i've got to make a statement about the freedom of the...
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Sep 8, 2012
09/12
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tell us your background. tell us about yourself. >> guest: well, sure. i was in ucla, go, bruins, that sort of thing. and then i was in the peace corps, two years in costa rica. i will be the first peace corps volunteer ever to be elected to national office, and that's kind of pleasing. i went to usc law school, was being drafted and then was a navy jag attorney for four years. >> host: during vietnam? >> guest: it was during vietnam. that's why i was being drafted, actually. within a week of getting back from the peace corps, i received my notice for physical, so guess what my future had in store for me? after i got out of the navy, i was a federal prosecutor in los angeles, u.s. attorney's office, prosecuted the standard cases, bank robberies, drug cases, doesn't really think about it much. ended up heading a unit prosecuting frauds against the government, fha, va, that sort of thing. after that was in the private practice of law, business litigation for five years and then was appointed to the bench, so i was on the bench for 25 years as a judge, and
tell us your background. tell us about yourself. >> guest: well, sure. i was in ucla, go, bruins, that sort of thing. and then i was in the peace corps, two years in costa rica. i will be the first peace corps volunteer ever to be elected to national office, and that's kind of pleasing. i went to usc law school, was being drafted and then was a navy jag attorney for four years. >> host: during vietnam? >> guest: it was during vietnam. that's why i was being drafted, actually....
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Feb 25, 2012
02/12
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>> i'm using a sony ericsson. we stallone sony ericsson even though we are departing so i have a and duraid phone with all of the different types of news i need for my daily work so this is part of my life and extremely regular. >> what about the future of the applications you see that continuing? >> in many cases it continues to be the internet is just growing with information to be i think that you and i want the easy way to find that so they will be important to find your way. i also think that the eight providers would be we of promoting their brand and get the leal community of users that are using the app that they can understand so they can establish a relationship with the consumers which nobody thought about for five years before so i think we are still going to see quite a lot of development on the app site how we develop the model for using that to reduce by >> finally, mr. vestberg, what do you say to someone that can look out and see these brand names and all this new technology and words perhaps that
>> i'm using a sony ericsson. we stallone sony ericsson even though we are departing so i have a and duraid phone with all of the different types of news i need for my daily work so this is part of my life and extremely regular. >> what about the future of the applications you see that continuing? >> in many cases it continues to be the internet is just growing with information to be i think that you and i want the easy way to find that so they will be important to find your...
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Apr 5, 2012
04/12
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so let us listen twice. this is a very good study. >> thanks jury much and to the panel for their candor. my name is john anderson, an independent analyst, and my question involves the political party finance and the electoral campaign finance for the foreign sources said the current stuff government of both u.s. and egyptian democracy promoters. it's what appears to be a healthy debate in egypt about that foreign financing. islamic democracy promotion on the one hand, and potentially campaigned in the party activities on the other no doubt a healthy debate. my question is particularly given what according to many sources is a long history of support the muslim brotherhood of the foreign sources particularly from the gulf and perhaps elsewhere not necessarily from the governmental services, but given this, what is the position of the fjp of the political parties coming electoral campaign, and the second part of the question what will be fpv due to ensure that all the egyptians have accurate information trans
so let us listen twice. this is a very good study. >> thanks jury much and to the panel for their candor. my name is john anderson, an independent analyst, and my question involves the political party finance and the electoral campaign finance for the foreign sources said the current stuff government of both u.s. and egyptian democracy promoters. it's what appears to be a healthy debate in egypt about that foreign financing. islamic democracy promotion on the one hand, and potentially...
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Jul 7, 2012
07/12
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eye 430
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does that really affect us? i don't think it does cucy itthaheingl a o ifec s >> david cameron also faced questions in the house of commons during paymasts questions. he discuss the banking scandal, whiched to several high-profile visit tions that mes tiher meership. you can watch his sunday night beginning at 9:00 stern and tif f a ar quzen. bbthk inor oest bilowher duties assigned. but by the end of the day, you are ready for someest. you don't get a full eight hours sleep. ifor r soor el >> the sailor lives in fear of the possibility of being whipd. it was always carried by a petty to w pic ed ttre lg. n't catthe bag. you don't want to see the cat of nine tails coming out of the bag for a gging. thor onorli arthidof icto y grinaprkt : ithgit deesi u d al505 feet and 8400-ton of the store quickly and privately pressed up into the rit. twng fxinae we seem hanfor ligh oome in tiles popped out. everything my desk lifted a foot and same but down. it literally clapped the underside of my desk and braise tie sedin d
does that really affect us? i don't think it does cucy itthaheingl a o ifec s >> david cameron also faced questions in the house of commons during paymasts questions. he discuss the banking scandal, whiched to several high-profile visit tions that mes tiher meership. you can watch his sunday night beginning at 9:00 stern and tif f a ar quzen. bbthk inor oest bilowher duties assigned. but by the end of the day, you are ready for someest. you don't get a full eight hours sleep. ifor r soor...
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Jul 7, 2012
07/12
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eye 478
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becky, you with us? we're having just a little trouble, if we could tell washington we're having a little troubl withbeck isais ti a y ct ift or. ucre cleof itugf e tim? i'm a conservative who read the a section and the op-ed daily for years until rcently. i came to feel that the tmes is thra j iiiao >> guest: um, i don't agree th him about the news columns. i think at no one should be surprised that the editorial pa ofthe w yois, cautfor not reading "t new york times," it calls out for balancing "the new yor times" withot newaper ascad onyivue , exe,n any gen night i will watch rachel maddow who i think is one of the smartest people on tv, and then we will switch tfo news us'sllpo t wevneyi oume pcuss oosard you're a newspapereporter. you're putting a story together, sos hahort notice withhe be mes geca ion mes ses asi u,u'otfitl somee people who will talk to you are not the people who provide the most balanced view. sometimes you just didn't it storls co in,hitoo er rbed t theut omel new product every
becky, you with us? we're having just a little trouble, if we could tell washington we're having a little troubl withbeck isais ti a y ct ift or. ucre cleof itugf e tim? i'm a conservative who read the a section and the op-ed daily for years until rcently. i came to feel that the tmes is thra j iiiao >> guest: um, i don't agree th him about the news columns. i think at no one should be surprised that the editorial pa ofthe w yois, cautfor not reading "t new york times," it calls...
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Feb 13, 2012
02/12
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eye 135
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>> guest: for obvious reason i'm using a sony-ericsson. [laughter] we still own sony-ericsson even though we are departing right now, so i have an android phone that i'm using right now with all the mails, all the different type of news that i need for my daily work. so i guess this is part of my life, and i check it extremely regularly. >> host: now, what about the future of apps? do you see thos continuing? >> guest: i think apps will in many cases continue to be extremely vital. as the internet is growing with information, i think you and i as users want the easy way to find it and not maybe search all the time, so apps will be important to find your way. i also think that pam providers welcome back -- app a providers will be one way of promoting their brands and actually get the loyal, loyal community of users that are using the app that they can is understand. so they can establish the relationship with their consumers through an app which nobody thought about for five years ago before an app existed. so i think we still going to see
>> guest: for obvious reason i'm using a sony-ericsson. [laughter] we still own sony-ericsson even though we are departing right now, so i have an android phone that i'm using right now with all the mails, all the different type of news that i need for my daily work. so i guess this is part of my life, and i check it extremely regularly. >> host: now, what about the future of apps? do you see thos continuing? >> guest: i think apps will in many cases continue to be extremely...
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Oct 24, 2012
10/12
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eye 137
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but i also see the chinese willing to make use of force and make use of kinetic options like the use of law enforcement vessels to try and control a situation is and try and assert their sovereignty claims. so that's my basic view on that. so i do, i do think that, um, party politics, party congresses do have an effect be, but i don't -- i would not predict a very peaceful, tranquil time over the next decade or so, by no means. >> great. that's terrific. everyone's here to hear you guys, so i won't say much, but that's why, that's half of why i think that this quick and easy analysis that everything just goes back to normal in u.s./china relations after the election on both sides is just mostly the chinese and a lot of interested parties in the u.s. trying to make themselves feel better to get through this, but i agree, i think we're in for a rougher time over the next several years. right in the back. >> yes. >> we've got a microphone, i think. >> yeah, hi, richard finney with radio free asia. this is a question for dean. just to follow up and continue with this question of domestic
but i also see the chinese willing to make use of force and make use of kinetic options like the use of law enforcement vessels to try and control a situation is and try and assert their sovereignty claims. so that's my basic view on that. so i do, i do think that, um, party politics, party congresses do have an effect be, but i don't -- i would not predict a very peaceful, tranquil time over the next decade or so, by no means. >> great. that's terrific. everyone's here to hear you guys,...
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Aug 14, 2012
08/12
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what we have it abundantly we don't use because of the labor laws, which we never used. there's very little chance going forward that we will be able to use it. and then we have a situation where scarce social capital, we call them public institutions, call it corruption, whatever. that is actually getting eroded progressively. the big governance, which is a big important development, that is being undermined through corruption and criminality. and, of course, what is happening is that land which is meant to be relatively abundant has been corruption in india. so will have a situation where if you take these four factors of production from a development perspective, what we're using intensively is running out of, what we don't use intensively we have a abundant amounts of it, and important governments and land are becoming real sources of corruption and the problem. so, you know, there's a chart that people have been using a lot because i put it up on blog poster if you look at our losses in india which is a kind of metaphor or a proxy for not just what is wrong with the
what we have it abundantly we don't use because of the labor laws, which we never used. there's very little chance going forward that we will be able to use it. and then we have a situation where scarce social capital, we call them public institutions, call it corruption, whatever. that is actually getting eroded progressively. the big governance, which is a big important development, that is being undermined through corruption and criminality. and, of course, what is happening is that land...
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Oct 18, 2012
10/12
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eye 131
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it hasn't affected us. i think flagrant violations you can identify. >> sounds like three quarters still at least. >> at least. >> just going back, the paper that you gave us has a section on it, titled "vicars, volcker under the ghost of glass steagall. i want us to be clear of your view of this because going back to the question asked, there is some confusion i think or misunderstanding about this. you said in this paper that the approaches of vicars and linnen appear close to the form of glass steagall restrictions in the u.s. which broke down over time and that made a precautionary lesson. hearing you describe your own proposal, to me that sounds more like a glass steagall two type proposal because it's proposing a complete separation between two sets of activities, rather than a ring fence within the same company. so who is closer to glass steagall two? is it you or vickers? >> they both have relevance. i said that because it would allow more functions in the overall organization than my rule. but you'
it hasn't affected us. i think flagrant violations you can identify. >> sounds like three quarters still at least. >> at least. >> just going back, the paper that you gave us has a section on it, titled "vicars, volcker under the ghost of glass steagall. i want us to be clear of your view of this because going back to the question asked, there is some confusion i think or misunderstanding about this. you said in this paper that the approaches of vicars and linnen appear...
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Apr 9, 2012
04/12
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eye 139
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a group of cops headed toward us. some of the rioters ran into a clothing store that was being looted. i followed. the cops entered the store swinging clubs and making arrests. my heart pounded as i ran into the back of the store and found a back door leading to an alley. i gasped for air as i ran down the alley and was stopped by a wooden fence. the cops came into the alley. halt, they yelled, put your hands up. in my mind i froze, put my hands in the air and turned around to face the cops with tears in my eyes. but my body kept hauling ass. i grabbed the fence and curried over the -- scurried over the top. two shots rang out. one splintered the wood on the fence near my butt. this gave me the fear of adrenaline push i needed to flip over the fence and scramble out of the alley. when i turned out onto the street, i kept running right past two other cops who tried to grab me, but i jerked away. turning the corner, i almost collided with a group of 20 or so black men in army fatigue jackets standing on the corner in a
a group of cops headed toward us. some of the rioters ran into a clothing store that was being looted. i followed. the cops entered the store swinging clubs and making arrests. my heart pounded as i ran into the back of the store and found a back door leading to an alley. i gasped for air as i ran down the alley and was stopped by a wooden fence. the cops came into the alley. halt, they yelled, put your hands up. in my mind i froze, put my hands in the air and turned around to face the cops...
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Aug 29, 2012
08/12
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eye 157
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they're used to construction under very tight schedules. the army had used them to build gun powder plants, for example. and so dupont takes on the job of creating n a sense, an industrial process that never existed before as they do enormous first at oak ridge and tennessee, but then, of course, the e more now facility -- enormous facilities out in washington where plutonium is going to be processed for the atom you can bomb that will be dropped -- atomic bomb that will be dropped on nag nagasaki. this is the process that bill knudsen sets in motion through the top prime contractors down through the subcontractors on through the rest of the american economy and industry that gets underway with it. by the time of pearl harbor, it's a wartime which has gone, production which has gone from basically a standing start to approaching that of nazi germany. by the end of 1942 when the effort really gets rolling, by the end of 1942 when the effort really gets started with the full conversion of the automobile industry, for example, over to wartime
they're used to construction under very tight schedules. the army had used them to build gun powder plants, for example. and so dupont takes on the job of creating n a sense, an industrial process that never existed before as they do enormous first at oak ridge and tennessee, but then, of course, the e more now facility -- enormous facilities out in washington where plutonium is going to be processed for the atom you can bomb that will be dropped -- atomic bomb that will be dropped on nag...
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Aug 7, 2012
08/12
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told us, we don't know what native aspirations did to us, but for some reason we learned to forgive each other, and we worked together. we brought everybody to the table whereas historically there were a lot of issues and people could not come together to work on what they needed to do. and so in closing today i just want to show you as we do our assessment looking at all the cultural strengths of our people and buildingÑi plans that are grounded in these issues as opposed to the deficits, it's very easy to go to what a community doesn't have as opposed to what they've survived with, what they've tapped into and what they build prevention from. we have used a lot of evidence--based interventions, but we're finding in these communities that they're culture-based innovations and all these examples are what they're using to go forward, and can bullying needs to beÑi interwoven among all of these. thank you. [applause]çó >> thank you, iris. and now we're going to turn itñr over toÑi alan acosta.ñrñ3mj4(pó hardest part of this would be get anything and out of the chairs, so -- [laugh
told us, we don't know what native aspirations did to us, but for some reason we learned to forgive each other, and we worked together. we brought everybody to the table whereas historically there were a lot of issues and people could not come together to work on what they needed to do. and so in closing today i just want to show you as we do our assessment looking at all the cultural strengths of our people and buildingÑi plans that are grounded in these issues as opposed to the deficits,...
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Jan 16, 2012
01/12
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eye 111
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that is the niece us. is that the attitude?h one is the qualms of the politics? been a part of the reason they are important similar to thec qualms that a lot of us have. we all see what is wrong with the political system, what is ugly about it and if they can address social needs and what not. but this is one of the things about obama that ends up being inhibiting and time and timeti again in my reporting sometimes in complicated ways havingng trouble feeling like a politician. he is kind to everybody in has the principal objection he doesn't want to spend thed entire time lose saying he wants to hang on to a normalita life in a presidency. so i watched the idea get tested again and again. >> there is another story having dinner at every night at 6:30 p.m. that means they cannot meet with the power brokers. is that a constant theme to i preserve the domestic life? >> yes. not only wanting to preserve the domestic life the part of the job of the situationa is barack obama debts to washington and not only does he have not so much managerial or executive secur nati
that is the niece us. is that the attitude?h one is the qualms of the politics? been a part of the reason they are important similar to thec qualms that a lot of us have. we all see what is wrong with the political system, what is ugly about it and if they can address social needs and what not. but this is one of the things about obama that ends up being inhibiting and time and timeti again in my reporting sometimes in complicated ways havingng trouble feeling like a politician. he is kind to...
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Jun 26, 2012
06/12
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but in the end they are not about us. they are by thousands of individual decisions made by the citizens and governments of sovereign nations. they are about the thirst for dignity, a proud people in every corner of the world. they are about fundable truths and universal human aspirations for which no society and no region is immune. we rightly approach our engagement with a large dose of humility. and yet looking back on the decades of drl, a time when through wave after wave, democracy has moved forward beyond american eastern europe and africa and the middle east, it is clear that the world is a better place today because you took the long arc of american foreign policy and didn't get towards justice. dro has led by the motto don't make a point, make a difference. and when we look back at the story of american diplomacy, as we've done today. it's clear just what he difference you have made. you help us to be the nation we aspire to be. and you help us exercise leadership in a more peaceful and more secure world. but ou
but in the end they are not about us. they are by thousands of individual decisions made by the citizens and governments of sovereign nations. they are about the thirst for dignity, a proud people in every corner of the world. they are about fundable truths and universal human aspirations for which no society and no region is immune. we rightly approach our engagement with a large dose of humility. and yet looking back on the decades of drl, a time when through wave after wave, democracy has...
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294
Jan 15, 2012
01/12
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spam gives us cause to see and record courtroom and says desperate and say they are harming us. i look at how me of my customers are being impacted. user to look at it in particular, the analysis showed it would reach out to a piece of infrastructure that we could track so it would attempt to download a patch any very specific way so we are able to fingerprint that. so we know how many machines we were dealing with. one of the criteria we would look at, and the conficker case it was a botnet. how many of my customers are being negatively impact by this recent malware? so i think the stage is not great on the internet, but i really, the past couple of years have really seen a surge in internet service providers and technology cubbies take more of an interest know that private companies can do more to protect folks. so i think the dark days are behind us. [laughter] >> i need some type of wood. i think we're getting that award is but as we start to really understand that there's more things that we can give them we're kind of coming out of that. and our last conference with about
spam gives us cause to see and record courtroom and says desperate and say they are harming us. i look at how me of my customers are being impacted. user to look at it in particular, the analysis showed it would reach out to a piece of infrastructure that we could track so it would attempt to download a patch any very specific way so we are able to fingerprint that. so we know how many machines we were dealing with. one of the criteria we would look at, and the conficker case it was a botnet....
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Nov 18, 2012
11/12
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you can use any of the terms. alexander hamilton used the term "representative democracy," we're based on majority rule and consent, but that is limited by a constitution; hence, this compound regime. now, one of the major charges that the colonist raised was he, george the iii, combined with others to subject us to a jurisdiction foreign to our constitution and unacknowledged by our laws giving assent to take acts of pretended legislation. now, of course, the constitution he was referring to in 1776 was the british constitution. the and sent constitution, but that con cement is the same. there was foreign jurisdiction that was going to have authority over us. we're going to examine now the ideas and practices of those who, in our time, have combined with others to subject us or attempt to to a jurisdiction foreign to our constitution. well, ideas have consequences as we learned long ago from an early isi scholar, richard weaver. let's examine the ideas. the global governance project. these are not hard to find. y
you can use any of the terms. alexander hamilton used the term "representative democracy," we're based on majority rule and consent, but that is limited by a constitution; hence, this compound regime. now, one of the major charges that the colonist raised was he, george the iii, combined with others to subject us to a jurisdiction foreign to our constitution and unacknowledged by our laws giving assent to take acts of pretended legislation. now, of course, the constitution he was...
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166
Jun 12, 2012
06/12
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eye 166
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entitlement is killing us. what you want is the ability to get a good socially supported health benefit for everyone say people who have the wealth can't spend it. no, let's tax progressivity. let government play with it and then provide you with a better benefit. if you want to get the wealthy, capped the entitlement. don't give it to everybody open-ended based upon the dynamics in society. duet people spend their own money above and beyond an adequate and. both for senior living and for health. that is what the debate ought to be about. that is why i included social security and medicare under the tax setting. can you tell us your affiliation? >> brian johnson america is going to rely on politics. we know that. chairman camp put out a very good tax reform territorial, over one, very technical discussion draft event. is it at all telling or discerning that when asked early at the chairman the senate finance committee said he didn't know what chairman can put out and doesn't think anyone does? >> i don't think
entitlement is killing us. what you want is the ability to get a good socially supported health benefit for everyone say people who have the wealth can't spend it. no, let's tax progressivity. let government play with it and then provide you with a better benefit. if you want to get the wealthy, capped the entitlement. don't give it to everybody open-ended based upon the dynamics in society. duet people spend their own money above and beyond an adequate and. both for senior living and for...
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154
Aug 6, 2012
08/12
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eye 154
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they had a long relationship, krall was very political, he used to use lines for a lot of -- lyons for his dirty work or to do things he didn't necessarily want to be associated with. and this was a case where the admiral really encouraged lyons and what he termed a window of opportunity plan which was an august '87, there was a turnover of aircraft carriers out in the gulf, and lyons wanted to use this plus a battleship that was about to arrive to really punish the iranians. perhaps even use it as a way of ushering in regime change with regime-level targets, not just military. on the other side of this was the centcom commander, my father, and pretty much supported by casper weinberger, very much so, and the civilians in the pentagon, if you will, outside the joint chiefs of staff who thought the answer with the iranians was more of a containment view and that we don't want to escalate this crisis. if they do something, we'll do sort of a restrained measure operation. we want to avoid striking the iranian mainland. but the object of trying to keep this crisis in check so it doesn't go
they had a long relationship, krall was very political, he used to use lines for a lot of -- lyons for his dirty work or to do things he didn't necessarily want to be associated with. and this was a case where the admiral really encouraged lyons and what he termed a window of opportunity plan which was an august '87, there was a turnover of aircraft carriers out in the gulf, and lyons wanted to use this plus a battleship that was about to arrive to really punish the iranians. perhaps even use...
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67
Jan 20, 2012
01/12
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however, budget pressure i think on all of us requires us to act more internationally. we have to leverage resources with one another and we are actually exploring some pilots wear we leverage inspections and checks abroad with other countries. we will do some, they do some, all with the same standards, all with mutual embeds to make sure those standards are abided by but the idea is to say look we are all under budget pressure. there are some things we can do together now and we ought to be exploring them, and we are. >> how worried are you about the future ramifications of their economic trouble? >> i worry about a lot of things. >> i'm sure you do. >> but, i think again, when we meet and speak and speak with each other, the ideas alright that is the situation we have. that is the hand of cards we have been dealt. how do we make this work so that there is a maximum ability to detect and interruption for violent action takes place? >> the u.n. has internationally provided it vice and sometimes equipment to help heart nurse in this security battle. is the u.s. still goi
however, budget pressure i think on all of us requires us to act more internationally. we have to leverage resources with one another and we are actually exploring some pilots wear we leverage inspections and checks abroad with other countries. we will do some, they do some, all with the same standards, all with mutual embeds to make sure those standards are abided by but the idea is to say look we are all under budget pressure. there are some things we can do together now and we ought to be...
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146
Mar 4, 2012
03/12
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eye 146
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but that is us. we have a sacred trust to know what that constitution means, to understand it, to read it, to digest it and so again by doing this i hope the american people would do that if they were students of the constitution. oftentimes you hear different ideas about the constitution. some will say the constitution is an elastic document. it's stretchable. it has words and you can read these words but we have to go beyond that because that is what the supreme court judge or of this constitutional scholar says it means. and then you have those to say the constitution is a limiting document. the constitution is what it says, you can't go beyond that and so we should interpret the constitution literally. there is this big debate in people get confused by this stuff. which one is it? is it a loosely interpreted document, is in an elastic document or limiting document? and so i actually cut through all of that. i really didn't care what modern scholars have said about the constitution to be honest wi
but that is us. we have a sacred trust to know what that constitution means, to understand it, to read it, to digest it and so again by doing this i hope the american people would do that if they were students of the constitution. oftentimes you hear different ideas about the constitution. some will say the constitution is an elastic document. it's stretchable. it has words and you can read these words but we have to go beyond that because that is what the supreme court judge or of this...
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Oct 20, 2012
10/12
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and enough of them, educating us about the truth of life in north korea. and several volumes published about life in north korea and we have a better picture of the truth of the existence. the north korean refugees are performing a second equally important function. i do believe more importantly they are helping to open their own information starved homeland just as the world knows more about north korea, north koreans know more about the world. this too is thanks to the efforts of north koreans who have escaped. how do they do that? any immigrant who goes to a new country what is the first thing he wants to do? to let his family back home know that he is okay and tell them about his new life but for a north korean who wants to do that it is next to impossible. you can't make a phone call in north korea or send an e-mail or text message or facebook and can't even mail a letter so the exiles have created a black market in information. they hire chinese careers to cross the border and deliver a messages or sometimes delivered chinese cellphones to a north ko
and enough of them, educating us about the truth of life in north korea. and several volumes published about life in north korea and we have a better picture of the truth of the existence. the north korean refugees are performing a second equally important function. i do believe more importantly they are helping to open their own information starved homeland just as the world knows more about north korea, north koreans know more about the world. this too is thanks to the efforts of north...
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May 20, 2012
05/12
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basically, i'd like to thank eric him el for having the faith in us to do the book and then giving us his encouragement all along and his aassistance, particularly gayle hand el who took over the project at the end and shepherded it through to publication. i'm going to talk a little bit about lindbergh, a hero, celebrity, goat in some ways and to talk about why i think in the 21st century it's difficult for anyone aside from, perhaps, an aircraft enthusiast or an aviation enthusiast to take the idea of the pilot hero seriously. and the reason i say that is because, um, flying has become so routine now. you can literally hop on an airplane and go anywhere in the world you want to go. and not only that, but aircraft themselves have become so sophisticated, commercial aircraft in particular have become so sophisticated that they literally fly themselves. and so what you have now is a kind of a person who's called a pilot, but he's actually just shepherding the aircraft from point to point. of course, he's got to be there if an emergency arises but, literally, these aircraft can fly thems
basically, i'd like to thank eric him el for having the faith in us to do the book and then giving us his encouragement all along and his aassistance, particularly gayle hand el who took over the project at the end and shepherded it through to publication. i'm going to talk a little bit about lindbergh, a hero, celebrity, goat in some ways and to talk about why i think in the 21st century it's difficult for anyone aside from, perhaps, an aircraft enthusiast or an aviation enthusiast to take the...
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Aug 10, 2012
08/12
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can you tell us -- start with europe. tell us what you think the picture is. certainly reading the headlines it looks very discouraging. >> well, the obvious question is europe is going to be breaking. i don't think so. i think at the end of the day they will find the solutions to hold europe together. >> will some countries lead? >> for me it is going to be on this side for a while and then come back on the certain conditions over me you are just managing the situation to make sure that in order to preserve europe you don't face any particular with some modification on the market, so i don't believe europe is going to be breaking and i think it will stay there. i think we are going to have some confusion. i have absolutely no doubt on the fact they are going to be at best stagnation so we are preparing for some time. >> stat nason suggests no growth, no shrinkage. >> within 1% you are going to be within this range of one per cent. >> not worse than that? >> it can get worse. my best is zero to 1%. you have a more scenario that we need to be prepared as compan
can you tell us -- start with europe. tell us what you think the picture is. certainly reading the headlines it looks very discouraging. >> well, the obvious question is europe is going to be breaking. i don't think so. i think at the end of the day they will find the solutions to hold europe together. >> will some countries lead? >> for me it is going to be on this side for a while and then come back on the certain conditions over me you are just managing the situation to...
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Aug 14, 2012
08/12
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that they used. i want to point out a couple things to you because it's kind of hard to read. at the top of the screen, you'll notice a green, yellow, and red bar across the top. those are where we display the peak flow readings. we used the national asthma guidelines, numbers of 80% or better of your predicted sloping green. that is correct. it is where it should be. if it is less than 50% of what should be, but that is red -- the danger zone. obviously, yellow is in the middle. below that you'll see a lot of green and red dots. what we did is the other odl's, we decided to display them on the dashboard, rest, smoking, asthma symptoms, we tried to make this as easy as possible for the clinicians. green is good and red is bad. green is a desired state. for example if you are out of control, you did use it, you were not exposed to triggers and red is like you did have symptoms or you you smoke or you have to used your hair inhaler today. that is what the commission has looked at. now i'm going to talk
that they used. i want to point out a couple things to you because it's kind of hard to read. at the top of the screen, you'll notice a green, yellow, and red bar across the top. those are where we display the peak flow readings. we used the national asthma guidelines, numbers of 80% or better of your predicted sloping green. that is correct. it is where it should be. if it is less than 50% of what should be, but that is red -- the danger zone. obviously, yellow is in the middle. below that...
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Jan 3, 2012
01/12
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very valuable for us in the task we have before us. if we could go to all of you just briefly, on the things you have experienced and we often learn more from those things we could have done differently what is your takeaway on that? what would you have done differently and in the text decks -- the context of the report we are looking to prepare based on your own experience what would you like to see included in that report that might have implications on a national basis? >> i guess i will start. what i would like to see in your report, more support for places like baltimore child abuse center. being a nonprofit center that helps children in the baltimore area who have alleged they have been sexually abused. those kind of support services are important you can imagine for a child having -- it is difficult but then they have to go through 14 different places and talk to 14 different people and their story might change because they feel if someone is asking they're telling it wrong or whatever--causes a lot of problems. they have one ce
very valuable for us in the task we have before us. if we could go to all of you just briefly, on the things you have experienced and we often learn more from those things we could have done differently what is your takeaway on that? what would you have done differently and in the text decks -- the context of the report we are looking to prepare based on your own experience what would you like to see included in that report that might have implications on a national basis? >> i guess i...
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Mar 13, 2012
03/12
by
CSPAN2
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eye 111
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please, trade with us, please invest in us and visit us. that was the plea, and i am conveying this to you. of course as you can see it drop very heavily. the blue dots are the lines so at the end of the year it caught up and during the spring and summer this is natural. but because of the situation by and explaining in this part of japan there is no contamination, and food and water, everything is monitored very carefully. it is safe now so, please, take a look, and i am always saying that we are grateful for visitors to japan. secretary clinton visited months after. the vice president visited japan and went to the site four months later. they came and what lady gaga made several visits as well. we are grateful to the different of japan. i call her foj, friend of japan to read the plan for the reconstruction there is a budget getting up to $25 billion, and the basic conception is that we will have all been reconstruction. we need your ideas, your planning initiatives for the american or japanese companies alike will be exempted from the co
please, trade with us, please invest in us and visit us. that was the plea, and i am conveying this to you. of course as you can see it drop very heavily. the blue dots are the lines so at the end of the year it caught up and during the spring and summer this is natural. but because of the situation by and explaining in this part of japan there is no contamination, and food and water, everything is monitored very carefully. it is safe now so, please, take a look, and i am always saying that we...
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Sep 16, 2012
09/12
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eye 101
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we have weapons we're not going to use them. they want to kill us, kill us. and they went. and i think? is powerful and very, very worried about what is happening in syria with people giving them weapons and say go do it. and coming once again from monarchies that are giving weapons and supported by others say we don't give them weapons, we give them means. so you have to think about it. so this is where i think from an islamic perspective, revolution could be a means if there is no other way. but we need to think about how do we get rid of dictators through resistance. nonviolence resistance and education. this is once again we also have to tackle. it's which kind of education we give. you are talking about if the muslim brotherhood are there, which kind of education. it's never, never perfect. we have always to reassess. because islamists have a specific way of educating but, you know, traditional islam, i was very concerned with [inaudible] is doing as an islamic institution in the way they're teaching. for example, so in the way we are coming with the understanding it's
we have weapons we're not going to use them. they want to kill us, kill us. and they went. and i think? is powerful and very, very worried about what is happening in syria with people giving them weapons and say go do it. and coming once again from monarchies that are giving weapons and supported by others say we don't give them weapons, we give them means. so you have to think about it. so this is where i think from an islamic perspective, revolution could be a means if there is no other way....
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May 15, 2012
05/12
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including theft and extortion such as one example is the use of the dos attacks which can be used by organized crime groups to carry out what is essentially the equivalent of an online protection racket against e-commerce website. another way to which the boundaries between these categories are quite blurry. next in the list is cyber terrorism. door beginning to find cyber terrorism as quote attacks against computers, networks and the information stored there in wind and to intimidate or coerce a government. further, to qualify cyber terrorism and attacks result in violence against persons or property, or at least causing the farm to generate fear. attacks that lead to death or bodily injury, explosions complaint crashes, and contamination or severe economic loss would be examples. series of attacks against critical infrastructures could be acts of cyber terrorism depend on the impact the attacks that disrupt nonessential services or through many a costly nuisance would not, end quote. cyber terrorism is typically carried out by nonstate actors. however, most observers including gain
including theft and extortion such as one example is the use of the dos attacks which can be used by organized crime groups to carry out what is essentially the equivalent of an online protection racket against e-commerce website. another way to which the boundaries between these categories are quite blurry. next in the list is cyber terrorism. door beginning to find cyber terrorism as quote attacks against computers, networks and the information stored there in wind and to intimidate or coerce...
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Feb 10, 2012
02/12
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eye 141
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by denying us access to contraception, they didn't support us as they had promised to do. they put obstacles in the way of us reaching our potential and fulfilling our promise to them. challenging social injustice. this is idea of social justice that exists for me and many catholics seems to be lost in the current battle over contraceptive access. social justice is a value that requires us to recognize the needs of others and helps them to fulfill those needs so they can little fi and productive lives. the u.s. catholic bishop claimed the same values when they say that the decisions violate the catholic religious beliefs but their decision doesn't include women. they say that it violates their religious conscience but whose conscience really matters when it comes to birth control decisions? and my fellow speakers have said most women use contraception at some point in their life including 98% of catholic women and judging by the fact that only 10% of u.s. catholics believe that church leaders have the final say about contraception might think we can all agree a woman's own
by denying us access to contraception, they didn't support us as they had promised to do. they put obstacles in the way of us reaching our potential and fulfilling our promise to them. challenging social injustice. this is idea of social justice that exists for me and many catholics seems to be lost in the current battle over contraceptive access. social justice is a value that requires us to recognize the needs of others and helps them to fulfill those needs so they can little fi and...